Lake Superior Paper - Handling and Treatment of Rock-drill Steel at Copper Range Mines (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. T. Mercer A. C. Paulson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
404 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1922

Abstract

The composition of steel and the theory of its heat treatment have been so ably discussed elsewhere that it is unnecessary to go into the subject here. The purpose of this paper is to describe briefly the method of treating drill steel at the Copper Range mines, giving some of the troubles encountered and the manner in which they were overcome or corrected. To study the matter properly, it was necessary to devise a system of records that would show the actual underground performance of the drills. To illustrate this system, the records of the Champion mine are used, as it is at this mine that most of the work along these lines has been done. Reports from each drill machine are made daily by the shop and mine, and tables compiled from these reports show the footage drilled, steel broken, drills received and sent out at the shop, drills sharpened, and bits cut off. These data show what each machine or party is doing and whether the miners' supply of drills is kept up to date. There have been times when the supply of drills has been short and time lost by the miner in looking for drills. The daily records show the number and condition of drills on hand at all times. Under the old method of sharpening, the drills were heated in a coke furnace, the proper degree of heat being judged by color. Then they were sharpened in a machine, reheated in a second coke furnace where the proper heat was again determined by color, and quenched in water. While this method was fairly successful in the hands of a careful workman and for the solid steel used in the old piston drill machine, the introduction of the faster water machine, using hollow steel, produced changes both underground and in the shop. Much more was expected of the hollow-steel and hammer-type machine, with its improved method of rotation, but troubles due to breakage, burnt bits, uneven tempering, etc., at once appeared.
Citation

APA: H. T. Mercer A. C. Paulson  (1922)  Lake Superior Paper - Handling and Treatment of Rock-drill Steel at Copper Range Mines (with Discussion)

MLA: H. T. Mercer A. C. Paulson Lake Superior Paper - Handling and Treatment of Rock-drill Steel at Copper Range Mines (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1922.

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